False confession
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Criminal defenses |
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Part of the common law series |
Defenses to crime |
Actual innocence |
Excuse and exculpation |
Defenses that deny the act: |
Alibi · Mistaken identity |
Frameup · Falsified evidence |
False confession · Automatism |
Defenses that negate intent: |
Infancy · Entrapment |
Insanity · Mental disorder |
M'Naghten Rules |
Diminished responsibility |
Mistake of law · Mistake of fact |
Intoxication |
Defenses that justify the act: |
Self defense · Consent |
Duress · Necessity |
Provocation |
See also Criminal Law |
Criminal Procedure |
Other areas of the common law |
Contract law · Tort law · Property law |
Wills and trusts · Evidence |
Portals: Law · Criminal justice |
A false confession is where a suspect in a crime admits guilt to the crime, even though he or she is not responsible for the crime. False confessions can be induced through coercion or by the mental incompetency of the accused. Even though false confessions might appear to be an exceptional and unlikely event, they occur on a regular basis in case law and it is one of the reasons why jurisprudence has established a series of rules to detect, and subsequently reject, false confessions. These are called the "confession rules".
Interrogation techniques such as the Reid technique try to suggest to the suspect that he will experience a feeling of moral appeasement if he chooses to confess. Material rewards, like coffee, the cessation of the interrogation and a warm bed are also used to the same effect. In Canada, courts of law have also recognized as valid confessions made, even though the interrogators lied by suggesting they had substantial evidence against a given suspect when in fact they didn't. (See R. C. Oickle, 2000 CSC 38[1]) It is then understandable that the high pressure generated may push innocent individuals to produce a confession. People who are easily coerced score high on the Gudjonsson suggestibility scale.
Sometimes sacrificial false confessions may be used to divert attention from the actual person who committed the crime. For instance, a parent might confess to save their child from jail. People may also confess to a crime, or plead guilty to a crime they did not commit, as a form of plea bargaining to avoid a harsher sentence. In some cases, people have falsely confessed to having committed notorious crimes simply for the attention that they receive from such a confession.
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[edit] Coercive false confessions
[edit] Central Park jogger
In the Central Park jogger case, on April 19, 1989, five teens aged from 14 to 16 were arrested and each confessed on videotape to the crime of attacking and raping a jogger and implicated each other. They later repudiated these confessions and maintained their innocence. The five were: Yusef Salaam, Kevin Richardson, Antron McCray, Raymond Santana and Kharey Wise. In 1989, the police were aware that an unidentified sixth person had left semen on the victim's body. In 2002, Matias Reyes, a convicted murderer and rapist, admitted that he was responsible for the rape and attack of the jogger. The DNA obtained from the crime scene matched Reyes. New York state justice Charles J. Tejada vacated the convictions of five defendants on December 19, 2002. Yusef Salaam served six and a half years in prison.
[edit] Pizza Hut murder
In 1988 Nancy DePriest was raped and murdered at the Pizza Hut she worked at in Austin, Texas. A coworker, Chris Ochoa, pled guilty to the murder. His friend, Richard Danziger, was convicted of the rape. Ochoa confessed to the murder and implicated his friend, Danziger, in the rape. It was later discovered that the confession was coerced and the guilty party was arrested. The forensic evidence that linked Danziger to the crime scene was a single pubic hair found in the restaurant that was consistent with his type of pubic hair. There was semen evidence collected, but DNA analysis was not performed. Both men received life sentences. Years later Achim Marino wrote letters while in prison claiming he was the murderer. The DNA was finally tested and matched Marino. Chris Ochoa and Richard Danziger were exonerated and released from prison in 2001 after 12 years of incarceration.
[edit] Corethian Bell
Cook County, Illinois prosecutors were required to videotape murder confessions, but not interrogations, starting in August of 1999. Corethian Bell, who is illegally retarded, said he confessed to the murder of his mother, Netta Bell, because police hit him so hard he was knocked off his chair and because he grew tired and hopeless after being in police custody for more than 50 hours. He said he thought that if he confessed, the interrogations would stop, then he could explain himself to a judge and be set free. With a confession on tape, he was then prosecuted and sent to jail. When the DNA at the crime scene was tested it matched a serial rapist, who already was in prison for three other violent sexual assaults, all in the same neighborhood as the Netta Bell murder.
[edit] Simon Marshall
Simon Marshall, was a Canadian rape suspect, he was imprisoned for 5 years before genetic evidence found him innocent. Mental retardation was a factor in his confession. This case lead to the creation of the Marshall Commission.
[edit] Stephen Downing
Stephen Downing spent 27 years in prison. The main piece of evidence used against him was a confession he signed, but only after an 8-hour interrogation which left him confused, and his poor literacy skills meant he didn't fully understand what he was signing.
[edit] Jeffrey Mark Deskovic
Jeffrey Mark Deskovic, was convicted in 1990 at age 16, of raping, beating and strangling a high school classmate, even though jurors were told the DNA evidence in the case did not point to him. He was incarcerated for 15 years. He confessed to the crime after hours of an interrogation without being given an opportunity to seek legal counsel.
[edit] Michael Crowe
Michael Crowe confessed to the murder of his younger sister Stephanie Crowe in 1998. Michael, 14 at the time, was targeted by police when he seemed "distant and preoccupied" after Stephanie's body was discovered and the rest of the family grieved. After two days of intense questioning, Michael admitted to killing Stephanie. The confession was videotaped by police, and appeared to be coerced, at times Michael saying things to the effect of, "I'm only saying this because it's what you want to hear." Two of Michael's friends, Josh Treadway and Aaron Hauser, were questioned and confessed after many hours of interrogation. The charges were dropped after DNA testing linked a neighborhood transient to her blood. A TV movie was made out of the story called The Interrogation of Michael Crowe in 2002.
[edit] Voluntary false confessions
[edit] Robert Hubert
Robert Hubert confessed to starting the Great Fire of London by throwing a fire bomb through a bakery window. It was proven during his trial that he had not been in the country until two days after the start of the fire, he was never at any point near the bakery in question, the bakery didn't actually have windows, and he was crippled and unable to throw a bomb. Despite this, Hubert was found guilty and executed by hanging.[2]
[edit] Laverne Pavlinac
Laverne Pavlinac confessed that she and her boyfriend murdered a man in Oregon in 1990. They were convicted, then released five years later when Keith Hunter Jesperson confessed to a series of murders. She had become obsessed with details of the crime. Her boyfriend confessed to avoid the death penalty. She later said she confessed to get out of an abusive relationship.
[edit] John Mark Karr
John Mark Karr confessed to the murder of JonBenét Ramsey. He had become obsessed with the details of her murder and was extradited from Thailand. His story did not match details of the case, and his DNA did not match that found at the crime scene. His wife and brother said he was home in another state at the time of the murder, and had never been to Colorado.
[edit] Others
- Over 100 people claimed to have abducted the child in the Lindbergh kidnapping.
- Over 500 people claimed to have been involved with the Black Dahlia murder.
[edit] Taping interrogations and confessions
Most jurisdictions do not require a confession to be videotaped, and fewer require the audiotaping of interrogations.
[edit] See also
- Central Park jogger
- Coercion
- Confession
- Gudjonsson suggestibility scale
- False memory
- Falsified evidence
- Fingerprint
- Miscarriage of justice
- Police misconduct
- Plea bargaining
- Reid technique
[edit] External links
- NPR: False Confession
- Slate: Why make a false confession?
- Psychology Today: False Confession
- Innocence Project: False Confession
- Chicago Tribune: Cops urged to tape their interrogations
- Time: Telling Untruths
- The Register: What is a Confessing Sam?
- The Truth About False Confessions
- Sign on San Diego: The Stephanie Crowe Murder Case